This statistic shows the number of people in the United States aged 25 to 34, by annual earnings in 2015 in U.S. dollars. In 2015, there were over **** million millennials earning over 100,000 dollars per year.
This statistic illustrates the current gross annual salaries of the Millennial generation in Great Britain as of 2016. It can be seen that almost ******** (**********) of Millennials stated that they did not know their current annual salary at that time.
Income of individuals by age group, sex and income source, Canada, provinces and selected census metropolitan areas, annual.
This statistic shows the number of high earning ** to 34-year-old Americans in 2023, by sources of income. In 2023, around *********** people between 25 and 34 years old whose annual income was 100,000 U.S. dollars or more obtained that income through wages and salary.
That year, among millennials aged 26 to 31 years, *** percent had no own income, while * percent earned less than 500 euros.
Income quintiles are assigned based on equivalized household disposable income, which takes into account differences in household size and composition using a method proposed by the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). The OECD-modified" equivalence scale assigns a value of 1 to the first adult
Age groups refer to the age group of the major income earner.
This refers to the main source of income for the household, that is, wages and salaries, self-employment income, net property income, current transfers received related to pension benefits, or other current transfers received from non-pension related sources.
Self-employment income refers to mixed income related to non-farm and farm businesses. Household rental income is not included.
Revenues from Current transfers received - pension benefits relate to current transfers received from corporations for employer's pension plans and current transfers received from government for the Canada and Québec pension plans (CPP/QPP) and the Old Age Security program including the Guaranteed Income Supplement (OAS/GIS).
Revenues from Current transfers received - others, relate to all other current transfers received not included in Current transfers received - pensions benefits, that is, it includes current transfers from the government sector except for the Canada and Québec pension plans (CPP/QPP) and from the Old Age Security Program (OAS) and the Guaranteed Income Supplement (GIS). It also includes current transfers from Non-profit institutions serving households (NPISH) and from the non-residents sector.
Owner/Renter refers to the housing tenure of a household. Households that have subsidized rents (partially or fully) are included under Renter.
Distributions by generation are defined as follows and are based on the birth year of the major income earner : pre-1946 for those born before 1946, baby boom for those born between 1946 and 1964, generation X for those born between 1965 and 1980 and millennials for those born after 1980. Note that generation Z has been combined with the millennial generation as their sample size is relatively small.
Distribution of value" is the share of a component of income
Value per consumption unit reflects the Statistics value" divided by the number of consumption units
According to a survey conducted by Statista Consumer Insights among Chinese Generation Z, most of the respondents had an annual disposable household income of over ****** yuan, with ** percent of respondents having at least ******* yuan per year at their disposal. In comparison, merely five percent of respondents said they had less than ****** yuan of annual household income.
The statistic illustrates the results of a survey about the annual income of millennials in Japan as of September 2017. In the period examined, the majority of millennials' households, about **** percent, had an annual income of up to ************ Japanese yen.
Comprehensive demographic dataset for Texas, US including population statistics, household income, housing units, education levels, employment data, and transportation with year-over-year changes.
This statistic shows the average annual total money earnings of individuals in the United States in 2023, by age group. In 2023, the average worker in the United States aged 45 to 54 earned an average of ****** U.S. dollars per year. That made ** to 54-year-olds the highest earning age group, on average, in 2023.
As of September 2021, the average salary of male Gen-Z employees in China reached ***** yuan, almost 1,000 yuan more than their female peers. The same source also revealed that nearly ** percent of male Gen-Zs had been promoted to management roles, while only ** percent of female employees said the same.
In 2024 men aged between 50 and 59 were the highest full-time earners in the United Kingdom among different gender and age groups, with men of different ages consistently earning more than women.
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Millennials are the largest generation, yet. As a result, their preferences are critical when it comes to evaluating success of urban agriculture. Using two online choice experiments, this paper investigates the preferences and willingness to pay of college student millennials for unprocessed (fresh) or processed (typically come in a container) food products sold at urban farms. We also examine whether competing points of sale and other attributes, such as organic, affect preferences, and willingness to pay for urban farm food. We find that, on average, college-age millennials are willing to pay a premium for local food. However, they are not willing to pay premiums for local food that is sold at farmers markets, and discount it when it is purchased directly from an urban farm. Our findings suggest that, if the goal is to increase the sales of urban farm food, targeted promotions are needed. Urban farms have to show the value from purchasing products through their channels to college-age millennials or seek the means to supply their food through grocery stores.
This table has been archived and replaced by table 36100664.
Income quintiles are assigned based on the equalized household disposable income. This takes into account differences in household size and composition. The Oxford-modified equivalence scale is used; it assigns a value of 1 to the first adult, 0.5 to each additional person aged 14 and over, and 0.3 for all children under 14.
The coefficients of variation from Statistics Canada's Survey of Financial Security for 2012 and 2016, which serve as indicators of the accuracy of these estimates for net worth and its components, are available in the appendix to Distributions of Household Economic Accounts, estimates of asset, liability and net worth distributions, 2010 to 2019, technical methodology and quality report for the March 2020 release.
Age groups refer to the age group of the major income earner.
This refers to the main source of income for the household, that is, wages and salaries, self-employment income, net property income, current transfers received related to pension benefits, or other current transfers received from non-pension related sources.
Self-employment income refers to mixed income related to non-farm and farm businesses. Household rental income is not included.
Revenues from Current transfers received - pension benefits relate to current transfers received from corporations for employer's pension plans and current transfers received from government for the Canada and Québec pension plans (CPP/QPP) and the Old Age Security program including the Guaranteed Income Supplement (OAS/GIS).
Revenues from Current transfers received - others, relate to all other current transfers received not included in Current transfers received - pensions benefits, that is, it includes current transfers from the government sector except for the Canada and Québec pension plans (CPP/QPP) and from the Old Age Security Program (OAS) and the Guaranteed Income Supplement (GIS). It also includes current transfers from Non-profit institutions serving households (NPISH) and from the non-residents sector.
Owner/Renter refers to the housing tenure of a household. Households that have subsidized rents (partially or fully) are included under Renter.
Distributions by generation are defined as follows and are based on the birth year of the major income earner: pre-1946 for those born before 1946, baby boom for those born between 1946 and 1964, generation X for those born between 1965 and 1980 and millennials for those born after 1980. Note that generation Z has been combined with the millennial generation as their sample size is relatively small.
Life insurance and pensions include the value of all life insurance and employer pension plans, termination basis. Excludes public plans administered or sponsored by governments: Old Age Security (OAS) including the Guaranteed Income Supplement (GIS) and the Spouse's Allowance (SPA), as well as the Canada and Quebec Pension Plans (CPP/QPP).
Other financial assets include total currency and deposits, Canadian short-term paper, Canadian bonds and debentures, foreign investments in paper and bonds, mortgages, equity and investment funds, and other receivables.
Other non-financial assets include consumer durables, machinery and equipment, and intellectual property products. Excludes accumulation of value of collectibles including coins, stamps and art work.
Other liabilities include major credit cards and retail store cards, gasoline station cards, etc., vehicle loans, lines of credit, student loans, other loans from financial institutions and other money owed.
Owner's equity refers to the value of the interests of an owner or partial owner in an asset, in this case real estate, divided by household real estate, which includes the value of structures (residential and non-residential) and land owned by households.
Distributions of Household Economic Accounts (DHEA) estimates are benchmarked to year-end estimates for liabilities and assets from the National Balance Sheet Accounts (NBSA, Table 36-10-0580-01), and for annual household disposable income from the Provincial-Territorial Economic Accounts (Table 36-10-0224-01). DHEA ratios for debt to disposable income, real estate as a share of disposable income, and net worth as a share of disposable income differ from those included in “Financial indicators of households and non-profit institutions serving households, national balance sheet accounts” (Table 38-10-0235-01) as the latter source adjusts disposable income for the change in pension entitlements. The measure of disposable income used for the DHEA ratios is more consistent with that shown in “Household sector credit market summary table, seasonally adjusted estimates” (Table 38-10-0238), which does not adjust disposable income for the change in pension entitlements.
According to a survey among premium Millennial shoppers, the share of affluent Millennials earning between ** and ** million Vietnamese dong reached around ** percent of respondents. The average income of total respondents who were affluent Millennials amounted to approximately ** million Vietnamese dong per month.
The statistic shows the average monthly income in China in 2017, by generation. According to the result of a survey, around ** percent of the surveyed Chinese Millennials earned averagely below ***** Rmb per month.
In 2024, the highest median amount of disposable income was among those aged 25 to 34 year-olds, at 43,552 pounds, with the highest mean income among those aged between 55 and 65.
As of 2020, the salary for millennial professionals in the cybersecurity field is approximately ****** U.S. dollars, compared to the salary of ******* U.S. dollars for baby boomers in the same field. The salaries of cybersecurity professionals vary by age, but this is not rather surprising as millennial professionals are still early in their careers, where the baby boomer generation has tremendously more work-experience behind them.
The statistic shows the median gross rent* as a share of pre-tax household income of Millennials aged 18 to 34 in the United States from 1980 to 2009. In 2009, 18-to 24-year olds spent 32 percent of their household income on rent.
According to the survey conducted on work life aspects of young Indians in 2020, over ** percent of millennials earning more than 100 thousand Indian rupees per month expected their income to rise by more than ** percent. Furthermore, only ten percent of respondents earning the same income expected their salary to increase by ** percent.
This statistic shows the number of people in the United States aged 25 to 34, by annual earnings in 2015 in U.S. dollars. In 2015, there were over **** million millennials earning over 100,000 dollars per year.